Palazzo Piccolomini Pienza
Palazzo Piccolomini is Pope Pius II's personal residence, built in the 1460s as the crown jewel of his utopian Renaissance city project.
About Palazzo Piccolomini Pienza
Palazzo Piccolomini is Pope Pius II's personal residence, built in the 1460s as the crown jewel of his utopian Renaissance city project. You'll see the papal apartments with original 15th century furnishings, a weapons room displaying period armor, and the spectacular hanging garden with its famous loggia. The loggia frames the Val d'Orcia landscape in what architect Bernardo Rossellino designed as the perfect marriage of Renaissance architecture and Tuscan countryside.
The guided tour moves through intimate papal chambers where you can touch 500 year old furniture and peer into the Pope's private study. The real magic happens when you step onto the rear loggia: the view opens up like a Renaissance painting, with the Val d'Orcia rolling away in perfectly composed layers. The guide explains how Rossellino calculated every sight line to create this visual masterpiece, and you'll understand why this single view appears on countless Tuscany postcards.
At EUR 7, this is exceptional value for a papal palace with original interiors intact. Most visitors rush through the indoor rooms to reach the loggia, but the papal apartments contain genuine treasures including Pius II's personal books and ceremonial objects. The tour runs every 30 minutes and is mandatory for entry, lasting about 45 minutes. Skip the expensive restaurants on the square afterward and grab paninis from the local shops instead.
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